vim-be-good
nvim-tree.lua
vim-be-good | nvim-tree.lua | |
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22 | 125 | |
2,682 | 6,533 | |
- | 2.0% | |
2.5 | 9.1 | |
29 days ago | about 14 hours ago | |
Lua | Lua | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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vim-be-good
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Ask HN: Comment here about whatever you're passionate about at the moment
Sure! The first thing I did was follow this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7i4amO_zaE
This is ThePrimeagen's 0 to LSP, Neovim RC from Scratch. In this video he performs a clean installation of Neovim and goes step by step adding the things he considers essential. This was very important for me to acquaint myself with how things work, how to install plugins, how to define custom key maps. I remember the first times I tried using Vim, I couldn't figure out how to get Nerdtree to work. This video made me realize I just lacked the knowledge of how Vim config works.
This video was such a good start because It provided me with the tools to continue my exploration of Vim autonomously. In a week I was already able to install new plugins and tweak them using Lua config files the way I specifically wanted. It's such a cool experience!
Keep in mind that both the author of this video and I use Neovim, which is a fork of Vim. As a text editor they both function essentially the same. The difference lies on the config files and in broader UI capabilities by Neovim. While Vim uses Vimscript, Neovim prefers Lua, although Neovim is fully backwards compatible, so you can choose to use Vimscript for your configuration if you want as well. This also means that Vim plugins just work with Neovim!
The docs are also a huge source of knowledge for me. In the beginning I resorted to :help key-codes a lot when defining key mappings.
To learn the Vim motions, which is the most challenging part of using Vim, I suggest you find a cheatsheet online and refer to it all the time. One very cool plugin that will help you get comfortable with Vim motions is ThePrimeagen's VimBeGod: https://github.com/ThePrimeagen/vim-be-good. It's a set of game-like exercises to practice the motions. This is also pretty cool and helped a lot: https://vimsnake.com/. It's a classic snake game where instead of using arrow keys, you use HJKL. And speaking of arrow keys, one thing I did very early on was disabling them (or, in reality, remapping them to noop) in normal mode so I was forced to move around the text using Vim Motions.
At first you will get frustrated because your brain will need some time to rewire in a way to absorb all the new abstractions Vim presents. It's a whole new logic of editing text. The most important thing is to stick to it and you will be surprised with how fast you end up picking things up. Of course, don't expect to be crazy fast in a few weeks. But right now, after a little over a month, I no longer feel that discomfort using Vim anymore. I suppose I'd still be faster on VS Code, but I really want to master Vim, so I'm sticking with it and I feel a constant improvement.
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Ask HN: How do I code offline for a week?
If you're not familiar with Vim, I'd encourage you to download a few Vim cheatsheets, the VimBeGood extension[1] and practice navigating code in Vim.
[1] https://github.com/ThePrimeagen/vim-be-good
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Practicing VIM
For Neovim, then this Hardtime plugin will help you change the habit, and this vim-be-good from Primeagen helps learn vim motion. TJ DeVries is also a good source to learn.
- Resources for mastering vim motions
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Vim for The VS Code User: Part 1 - Initial Setup
A game for learning vim, in vim: https://github.com/ThePrimeagen/vim-be-good
- recommendation on vimgolf challenges
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Please help a noob.
I'm trying to NeoVim (and vi) in general having never used it. I decided to start with VimBeGood but I can't get it to launch a game. I've gotten the plugin installed but when I run :VimBeGood it just shows the screen saying "to play a game delete that line." I deleted words and noob but after that I'm lost. Nothing happens. What did I do wrong?
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Question regarding vertical movement
I recommend vim-be-good for practicing this
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Whats the next step?
There are plugins like https://github.com/ThePrimeagen/vim-be-good that can help with practice.
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Atom has been archived
I found https://github.com/ThePrimeagen/vim-be-good to be kind of a nice way to build some muscle memory for vim.
nvim-tree.lua
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Installing neovim plugins (nvim-tree)
This works for installing the other plugins. But I can't seem to access nvim-tree. According to the website (https://github.com/nvim-tree/nvim-tree.lua), I should be able enter :NvimTreeOpen in neovim, but I get "Not an editor command: NvimTreeOpen." Any ideas?
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NeoVim Capability Functions
For splitting the terminal you could try either toggleterm or tmux. If you want to send things from one tmux pane to another, then you can use slime. For a toggle-able filetree, you can use nvim tree.
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How to configure vim like an IDE
(Neovim) nvim-tree
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Best way to manipulate files inside neovim?
Also you can use your file browser such as neo-tree, nvim-tree, or even netrw.
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NvimTree customize colors when it in out focus
I have almost finished customize nvim tree to equal bg colors. Can't resolve only when nvtree out of focus. What of paramets i should write? I tryied from this https://github.com/nvim-tree/nvim-tree.lua/blob/master/doc/nvim-tree-lua.txt but nothing
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Trying to apply a fix for nvim-tree, but don't understand how to apply it.
I was having an issue with my colorscheme Sonokai and I found my issue
- NvimTree vs NeoTree
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How to easily diff two directories from within Neovim
Personally I use will133/vim-dirdiff plugin, but it is pretty troublesome as I need to invoke `:DirDiff /path/to/dir1 /path/to/some/dir2`. What would be ideal is to extend nvim-tree, to be able to mark two directories (in similar manner as it has bookmarks) and then execute `:DirDiff` against those marked directories, but I'm not that familiar with Lua yet to write that. ;/
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Neither netrw or nnvim-tree open when I try to open current directory
The open_on_setup feature apparently has been removed in nvim-tree.lua https://github.com/nvim-tree/nvim-tree.lua/wiki/Open-At-Startup. Look at this wiki page where you can get all the necessary helpful information there about how to configure open_on_setup.
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Tabstop always changing
My tabstop is changing from 4 to 8 everytime that I open a file using nvim-tree https://github.com/nvim-tree/nvim-tree.lua
What are some alternatives?
10-minute-vim-exercises - The exercise files from 10 Minute Vim, for convenience of readers
nerdtree - A tree explorer plugin for vim.
which-key.nvim - 💥 Create key bindings that stick. WhichKey is a lua plugin for Neovim 0.5 that displays a popup with possible keybindings of the command you started typing.
neo-tree.nvim - Neovim plugin to manage the file system and other tree like structures.
vim-sneak - The missing motion for Vim :athletic_shoe:
chadtree - File manager for Neovim. Better than NERDTree.
vim-surround - surround.vim: Delete/change/add parentheses/quotes/XML-tags/much more with ease
telescope-file-browser.nvim - File Browser extension for telescope.nvim
tree-sitter - An incremental parsing system for programming tools
vim-gitgutter - A Vim plugin which shows git diff markers in the sign column and stages/previews/undoes hunks and partial hunks.
lens.vim - A Vim Automatic Window Resizing Plugin
nerd-fonts - Iconic font aggregator, collection, & patcher. 3,600+ icons, 50+ patched fonts: Hack, Source Code Pro, more. Glyph collections: Font Awesome, Material Design Icons, Octicons, & more